PAGE EIGHT MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFOKD, OREGON, THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 1936 MEDFORDwTRIBUNE "Efrryon Is Ooathvrs OrtsoB Bada lh HmU Tribu" Dally Excpt Sstordar. Published by MBOPORO PRINT IN (1 CO. N. Plr St. Phona tl, ROBERT W. RUHU Editor. IRNEBT R, OIL8TRAP. yuifr. Ab lQdpr.dnt Nswapapar. n tared MoondclaM matter svt Mad ford, OrtfOD, undar Act of Marcs t, Itll. SUBSCRIPTION RATE! By Mall In Advance J Dally, on yaar ...11.60 Dally, all months 1.71 Dally, on month i By Carrlar. to Advance Mad ford. Ah land. Jaekaonvtlta. Cant rat Point, rnoanix, Taiant. Oold Bill ut hlrhwaya. Dally, on yaar If. 00 Dally, all montha I.2K Dally, ona month 10 All term a, eaah Id ad vane. Official tair of the City of Bedford. Official Paper of JacJtaoB Co only. UB1IHEK OF. THE ABHOOIATKU PKfcBS Receiving Pull laacd Wlr -.. The Aaaoelatad Praaa la aioluaUaly an tJtlad to tha u for oubllcatlon of al aawa dtapatchaa eradltad to It or othar via eradltad In this pa par, and alao to ui local niwi putmanao baraln. All rljhta for publication of apactal oiapatcnaa nora.n ara aito rMrvd. MEMBER OP UNITED PRESS MEMBER OP AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATIONS Advertlalng Rapraaantattvaa M. C. MOO EN HEN COMPANY Offlcaa In New York, Chicago Detroit San Pranclaao, Lob Angela. Seat'.Je, Portland. Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry. A Louisiana maid of 10 lummen lias talked 'Mncesssntljr lor a wwk," duo to the aftermath of an Influ nea attack, and not a desire tor public office. Further proof the is not a candidate for anything la provided by the press report "she talka rationally and Intelligently on all subjects." Robins are hopping around on residential lawna, acting ilka they were the sole ortglnatora and owners of Spring. s "A terrlfle wind on Friday, the thirteenth 'a 1 d a d considerably In cleaning up tha strsets." (Btanfleld Items, Pendleton Esst Oregonlan) The elementa ahow a bit of civic pride. a e Our wlde-awaka and faarleaa OofO. aklpper who laat week hurled a defl at the Russian Soviet and all their works, aa yet baa received no reply from Commlselarlat Stalin. It la (' hoped he will be able to continue the battle against Communism and Communists to a victorious oonclu aton, at tha aame time keeping up with hla secretarial duties. ... A man waa hers tha first of the week taking orders for Irish wolf hounds. Tha Irlah wolfhound, Judg ing by tha aampla, takea up more room In tha parlor than a cow pony. Peoria Bill dates la now agitating enlon culture in tha valley. The onion la a, fine vegetable, and one of Che main propa of civilisation. ... BEAUTY IN THE BILLS (Salmon Bar (Calif.) Jottings) We had a barber and a good one. Now he la gone. I told you aol The aour-dougha and the Rip VanWInklea wouldn't get a hair out, even on their faces. For tha else of the place, we have mora red hair and good lookera than any mining camp In the world. Consequently the ladlea have en gaged a permanent tonsorlal ar tist to offset the sour-dough de linquent. e Society buds have started playing tennis with tha social weed. . . It now develops that the placing of white crosses at polnta on high waya where auto deatha have oo curred, has failed to leaasn reck less driving. A deeper Impreaalon might be made on speed Idiots, by designating on mlle-poata the die tsnce to the penitentiary, aa well aa the next town. ... enable to wedge himself, with 14 companlona. Into an auto originally built for two passengers, a youth yeaterday wna forced to walk seven blocks In tha bright aunshlne, to get home, lie made It. ... CAVEMAN ST1TF. (Orante Pass Courier) To the Editor: Arthur Perry of Medford In his 'Smudge Pot" column seems to think that the Cavemen of tha Apptegate home round-up March 1A shivered and shook because they were dressed acantlly In coyote skins and no pants. I wonder If ha thinks a Cave man ran not do a bit of shimmy dance without being cold, and dors ha think they get pneumonia, aa he mentions? Show me one of that type l It takes something besides heat or cold to make a Caveman wlnca. Does Mr. Perry think Cavemen are all weaklings? Not on your llfel I have aeen them 8600 feet up a mountain frolicking and get rolled down the mountain aide and emerge from a snowdrift laughing and hav ing the timea of their Uvea. Alao I have aeen them after they had been In a hot eouthern parade, come In at night with their sunburned sk'.n peeling In sheets slmoat like tissue psper, but did they oomplsln? Don't you bene It. When Cavemen drink warm blood from a aaber-toolh tiger and est raw dinosaur ateak. do you think they shut their syea and frown upon It. No. no' by any meana. be .cause Cavemen are not built that way. No douht our Chief Big Horn would be pleased to have Mr. Perry attend one of our meetings. If he falnte he will be taken rare of. as we elwaye have a Caveman medicine man on hand In case aomethlng goes wrong with one who cannot stand the gaff. We appreciate Mr. Parry's interest In regard to our heslth, CAVEMAN L. A. RINOUKTTTi. nsmewatcher, J EMBER Personal Health Service By William Brady, M O. alined letters pertaining to personal Health and hygiene Dot to disease diagnosis or treatment will be answered by Dr. Brady u atamped eelf-ad dressed envelope li enrliiaed. Letters eboald be brief and arrltteii In ink. Owing to the large number of letten received only a few can be anawered. No reply can on made to queries not conforming to Initructlona. Address Dr William Brady, 66 El Camlno. Beverly VITAMIN TIIKBAPI Large doaea of uric acid admlnte. tared to a normal person cause no apparent 1U effects, certainly notn Ing In the least comparable with gout or any form of arthrltl. (rheumatism to you, old tlmera) Depoalts of mono -sodium urate are found In or near the Joints In certain cases diagnosed as gout (or we found ' In the daya of our fath en, t h o rarely today). Few physlclana today believe uric acid or auch uratlc deposits in the tissues the eause of any dis ease, urio acid la a normal ena product of the metabolism or com- buatlon of certain nltrogenoua xooa oxidation of tissue nuclei; the blood of a healthy person contalna ap proximately one-flftleth of a grain of urlo acid In each ounce; the body excretes ten to fifteen grains of urte acid dally. Bo we can't as crlba dlaeaaa to the presence of uric acid In the blood or to the deposit of uric acid suits In the tissues. Accurate analyses of blood fall to Show any definite change In the uric acid level In cases diagnosed typical gout, and commonly ahow an exceae of uric acid In quite dif ferent affections, sucb sa leukemia and pneumonia. In ahort, I blush like anything to admit the evidence ahowa quite clearly that the medi cal profeaslon guessed wrong when we adopted tha uric acid concept of disease. Chsnges in the quantity and character of the uric acid com pounda In blcod and tlasuea may be ian Index of the fault of metabolism. ! but cannot tell ua the cause of the , traubje If It la necessary to lower the In take of the nltrogenoua material from which urlo acid la derived the physician prescribes a purlne-free diet, that Is, foods which contain little or no purine base and auch diet excludea altogether certain Itema auch aa yeaat, liver, aweetbread, brain, kidney, meat extracts, soups, gravies, beef tee, tea, coffee, cocoa, malt llquora, pork, mutton, chicken, veal, salmon, halibut. The purlne free diet allows free use of milk, eggs, cheese, butter, sugar, white bread, rice, tapioca, cabbage, cauli flower, lettuce, macaroni, atrawbsr rlea, for elderly patient a little wine. Food In the purlne-noor Hat and therefore permissible In some ctrcumatancea are note. toes, onions, tumlpe, carrota, parsnips, asparagus, rhubarb, spinach, datea, figs, cod fish, sole, oatmeal, pea, beana. Even the atrlcteat purlne-free diet gives only Indifferent results, In the treatment of aliments regarded aa of goutr nature. I euspect the only NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O. Mclntyre NEW YORK, March 10. One of the greatest of the lost manuscript tragedies took place in 1000. The late Prank Norrla was then a read er for a publish Ing nous. The manuscript of a novel came In from an unknown author. Norrls recommended 1 1 with enthusiasm. So did tho other renders. Norrla was In structed to toll th. suthor, htm or her, that his work waa accepted and the firm was looking forward to It publication. On hla rtrak at 41 Union Square. Norrla had two plies of manuscripts, those rejected and those accepted. Then occurred one of those unaccountable blunders. The novel by the unknown witter was placed on the rejected pile and back It went. Too late, Norrls dis covered the mistake. A stenographer had automatically returned It. There wss no record no duel Norrls de clared It to be one of the two finest novels he ever read. The other was Dreiser's "Slater Carrie." His enthusinsm for "Bister Carrie' caused It to be accepted. The missing manuscript waa never heard from, although every effort was made for Its retrieval. So far as known It waa never published. Norrls used th episode for one of his short stories later. For several years Joe Cook has had a shiftless servant he Is always on ths verge of firing. But he is ao persuasive In his begging for another chance that he has proved practically unflrable. So much ao Cook calls him ''Aubfstos.' Ryley Cooper brings north ths story of Florida's larleat cracker. So Indo lent neighbors decided to bury him before he starved to death. As ths procession moved toward the ceme tery with Old She stretched on a wstton bed, a stranger aked who had died. He was told no one had hut they were going to bury the lazy fel low before he starved. "There ain't a lick of food In hit houne," they added, The stranger said he had a load of corn he would be glad to give him. Whereupon Old Ebe raised on his elbow and inquired weakly: "Is It shucked?" Theater aurilem-ee often weep over absurd Illusions. In the plsy. "Pead End." for Inslsnce. Everybody grows wet eyed at a Damoclean aword that doea not hang In actual criminal Ju risprudence. Tile menace of the play lies In the threat of a reform school sentence tor the young hero. The feet ts a reform school sentence with out probation on a first olfense Is a4- Bills. CaL OT CHRONIC ARTHRITIS. benefit of purlne-free diet regimes ara In reality (1) tha lowered calo ric Intake, and (3) the lncreaaed In take of minerals and vitamin in auch foods. Please note, old fogies, that noth lng la said about "red" and "white" or "dark" and "light" meat for the simple reason that there 1 no appre clable difference between them a far aa uric acid metabollam la con cerned. If you have followed a diet tht euggests the contrary, you've been had, that'a all. The quack who preacrlbed or suggested your funny diet msy not have deceived you In tentionally; he Just didn't know any better that'a what keepa him quack lng It like that. Meat I meat re gardless of Its color. Long before the new treatment of arthritis, with massive dose of vlUt mln D waa developed, we bad postu lated that the malady might be manlfeatatlon of prolonged moderate vitamin shortage In many cases. This assumption 1 now proving true In the experience of physlclana who are putting the treatment to a clini cal teat. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Bow-Legged. I am 31 year old, weigh 05 pound and have the misfortune to be bow legged. . . . some kind of massage cream to build up the flesh of my lnslds calvea so the bowing would not be ao noticeable . . . L, L. O. Answer No manipulation, mas sage or appliance can etralghten bow legs In a person over alz yeara of age. Only operation on the bent bones will do so. If you could gain. aay, 30 pound weight, the bowing would be leaa apparent. Send ten cents and atamped envelope bearing your address, for booklet "Building Vitality." Or aend atamped envelope for monograph "Gaining weight." Laundry Work Is Healthful. la there great danger of catching crl or any dlaesse by waahlng soiled handkerchiefs? What disinfectant could one use to prevent the dan ger? . . . M. M. O. .. Anwer Practically no danger, for aoap and hot water, not to men tion the chlorine bleaching fluids used In laundering white clothea. are the best of disinfectants. Laun dry work la alwaya healthful work. Even if the laundress haa to go out In the cold to hang clothes. Transmural Resection, Can one who haa had electro coagulation of proatate have the prostate removed later by operation If necessary? . . . P. 8. Answer Tea. It la rarely neces sary. (Copyright, 11138, John F. Dllle Co.) Ed. Notet Persons wishing to communlcoate with Dr. Brady should send letter direct to Dr William Brady, M. D 385 El Camlno. Beverly Hills. Calif. most never given, unless the crime ts almost akin to murder. I might add I led the sobbing In our pew opening night. With all stops out! Many who have their own barome ters for shifts In the economic eclipse believe the corner Is actually turned. Frank Case, the hotel man, la grow ing gloomy again. On daya when his dining rooms are most crowded he la wandering around as though Just on the verge of tears. When things were dsrkest snd during ths time he did not know whether ha would be able to keep his Inn or not he wss the life of every party the ray of supshlne In the grills, a beaming first nlghter and happiest of punsters. Today, although making vast Im provements In his establishment and enjoying the beat trade In years, he suggests Ollead la without balm and all hope has vanished. Ego (1038 version): Six notorloua New York gangsters are subscribers to a press clipping bureau. Thingumabobs: Dick Berlin Is gad ding about China. . . . Robert Bench ley's new book Is titled "My Ten Years In a Quandary, snd How They Drew." . , Rex Beach haa a room filled with golf trophies. . . . Mur- dock Pemberton la on ths staff of Es quire. . , , When they get off Pullmans sneering, It la called "air condition als." . . . Col. E. M. House, In his 70s and In good health, was not ex pected to live out hts boyhood. . . . Pauline Lord talks thst way off stage, too. One of the erudite lecturera at Town Hall the other morning went off the deep end with the Jlttera. In an exciting part of hla talk, he shout ed: "So the child came to the door and begged for an apple. Tha woman turned away and brang one. . . ." That sounded terrible, an he atarted over: "So the woman brung one. . . ." He halted, atartlng. At last a great light. He had It. "So the woman," he ahrleked. "broughten her one." (Copyright. 1936. McNaught Syndicate) ,, Livestock PORTLAND. Ore.. Msrch 10 (AP U0DA1 HOOS: Receipts 300 Includ ing 100 direct: market steady to 10 cents higher; good-choice 100-310 lb. 10 50-60; few 930-00 lb. butchers 10.O0-3S; lights, s.10 00-39; packing sows mostly $8 35; feeder pigs good choice. 110 60. CATTLK: Receipts 300. calve IS Including 3 direct; market steady; load good-choice Hit, lb. fed steer. S7.&0; load good 055 lb., 17.50; common-medium 08-830 lb. steers, 5 flo (185; few good 1176 lb. drlvs-tns 7 35. common-medium heifers. $4.75-8 00; cut tery kind down 14 00; low cutter and cutter cowa. $3 75-3.75; common medium. $4 00-00; bulls. $4 76-5 50; outstanding. $5 85; cutters down $4 36; common-medium reelers $6 8 00; choice quotable $0 50. SHEEP: Receipts 600; market active j steady to atrong; two loadi fed lamb ! 99.7S-10O0; medium-good trades 9.00-35; odd head fairly good spring ismoe u.oo; medium 60 lb. down 9.50: good-clrbles 110-56 lb. e as .60-6.00. SAN FRANCISCO, March 19 (AP DDA HOOB 160, direct 45. Quality Improved, steady to atrong; top and ouik 176 to 318-10. California. 619.80: small lot 346-lb, weights. 610.40; few 10.40; few 310-lb. averages, 69.90; lew packing aowa, 6860. CATTLE 178. Slaughter ateera rainy active, fully steady; good un der 900-lb. fed ateera absent, quoted around 67.65 7.78; heifers absent; cowa around 35c lower for week; odd lot common to medium range cowa. 4.5035.00; good young cowa, 86.75: low cutter and cutters mainly 63.36 94.00; few common to medium bulls around 65.00, good quoted to 68.00, about ateady. Calvea 10, all direct. Nominal; good and choice vealers choice vealera quoted 69.00 a 10.00. SHEEP 100, nominal; good under 85-lb. fed wooled lamba and spring lamhe quoted around 69.36 e 9.60; ewes salabl to 65.50. CHICAGO, March 19. (AP-USDA) HOOS 11,000; atrong to 10c high aowa ateady, top 610.75, bulk 160 to 350 lbs., 610.40310.70; 360 to 300 lb.. 610.10 10.60; 300 to 350 lb, 69.85 10.15; 140 to 160 lbs., 810.35a 1065; aowa, 69389.60, CATTELE 5000, calvea 1600; fed ateera and yearlings atrong: good share week'a early decline regained especially on light steers and year. Hugs; killing quality plain; beat around 610.35; odd lota light offering to 611.00; bulk, 7.50s9.00; Blockers alow, steady; better grade 87.35e8.00 with outstanding atockera to 68.76: better grade helfera, 68.00 a 8.60 In load lota, ateady; lower grade heifers atrong at 67.00 down; other classea ateady to to atrong; sausage bull up to 65.90; vealera, 69.00 down. SHEEP 10,000; opening sales fully steady with light and handy weight lamba active; early top 610.36 to ahlp- pera, 610.35 to packers: come heavy lamba sold upward to 610.00, but most bids on 100-lb. and over aver- agea lower; bulk early aalea fat lamba 610.00010.35; aheep scarce, about steady; native ewea, 80.50 down. Portland Wheat PORTLAND, March 19. (P) Drain. Wheat. Open High Low Close May 84 84 83 ft 83 July 77 7754 77 77 Sept. 76 i4 76'A 76 76 Cashl Big Bend bluestem 61.1914 Do (13 pet.) 13314 Dark hard winter (13 pet.) 1.0914 Do ((I pet.) .9714 80ft white, western white 514 Northern aprlng, hard winter .8414 Western red .:. .85 Oats, No. 3 white, 23.50-33.00, Corn, Nok 3 E. yellow, 831.00. Mlllrun, 617.50. Today'a car receipts: Wheat flour 16; hay !. 34; Portland Produce PORTLAND, Ore., March 19. ( AP) BUTTER Prints, A grade 3414c lb.' In parchment wrapper, 35c lb. In cartona; B grade, parchment wrapper 3314c lb., cartons 34140 lb. BUTTERFAT Portland delivery: A grade, dellverlea at least twice weekly. 35 a 38c lb.; country routes, 33 35c lb.; B grade, 33 8 33c lb.; C grade at market. B ORADE CREAM FOR MARKET Buying price, butterfat bast, 6314c pound. EGGS Buying price of wholcsalera: Extraa, 180; atandards, 16c: extra mediums, 16c: do medium firsts, 16c; undergrade, 13c; pulleta, 13c dozen. ONIONS Oregon, 61.00a 1.35 per lbs. Cheese, milk, country meats, live poultry, potatoes, wool and hay, steady and unchanged. Chicago Wheat CHICAGO, March 19. (AP) Wheat: Open. High Low Close May .9814 .981. .07 T4 .88 "4 .8714 .S8V. .89 "4 .88 July .88 .88 H Sep. .874 .88 Wall St. Report NEW YORK, March 10. (AP) With gains of fractions to 8 or more polnta predominating, the stock mar. ket today more than recovered Its recent losses. Improvement In flood conditions and ths foreign situation helped to bring a revival of selective buying, The close, desplts la to profit taking, wa firm. Transfers spproximatd 3.100.000 shares. Today's closing prices for 33 select ed stocks follow: Al. Chem. A Dys 101 Am. Can .... Am. tx Fgn. 134 8'S 164 36 76 34 1P 56 34 70 06 33 147 35 64 87 16 114 40 36 73 , 46 I Pow. A. T. Ai T Anaconda Atch. T. & S Bendlx Avis Beth. Steel California Pack'g Caterpillar Tract. .... Chrraler . Com!. SoIt. ........... Curtlss-Wrlght Dm Pont Oen. roods Oen. Mot. ... Int. Harvest. I. T. T Johns Msn Monty Ward North Amer Penney J. C.) Phllllpa Pet Radio sou. rc std. Brands ..... St. Oil Cat. St. Oil N. J Trans. Amer, l?ntrn Csrb Vnlt. Aircraft O. S. Steel S3' M 64 37 65 San Franclo nutter SAN FP-ANCi-OO. March 16 (API -Butter unchanged. SACRAMENTO. March 1 (API- Churning cream butterfat. first arade 37'. c, second ciade 30'. c. 94 DEAD COUNTED 200,000 ABANDON HOIS IN FLOOD (Continued from Page One) burgh sres, the rampage from the Mongshela and Allegheny r It ere surged down the Ohio, striking Weltaburg. W. v., Wheeling and nu merous Ohio cities, endangering oa cutting off water supplies and spread -i lng the danger from pestilence. Wellsburg Hard Hit. At lesat three persons were drown ed as the Ohio spilled over Wells- burg. Chief of Police Arthur declared: "We're In terrible shape here. We've got to get help." , . With Wheeling Islsnd, In the middle of the Ohio, Inundated, the flood covered ths business district of Wheeling with 10 feet of water. Thirteen persons were dead, 0 by flood, 4 by explosion. And down the Ohio, thoussnda of residents hurried to high ground.: In New England, new danger came from the swiftly rising Connecticut river,' which threatened Hartford, Conn., with Its worst flood In his tory. Up the Connecticut valley, the heavy rains steadily intensified the fears of further loss of life. At Hatfield, Mass., the stesdy up sweep endsngered 150 persons ma rooned on an Isolated hill top. Of ficials expressed concern for their safety. The Increased death llat came with the recession of rivers throughout tne east. At Pittsburgh, rescue work, ers counted 10 known dead In the metropolitan area and believed 14 more may have perished. Death List Grows. At Johnstown, first reports said only five had died, but every hour brought rumors of more deaths from the two days of ravage by the Cone maugh. The Potomac surged toward the Chesapeake bay on the worst ram page on record, threatening the na tional capital, with its many shrines. The Connecticut and Merrimack rivers In New England were in a steady rise, swelled by continued rains, but the Ohio river valley was the center of the daya greatest havoc. Terrifying in Its swiftness, the surge of flood waters In the early dawn poured over Wellsburg. drown, ing two men. Throughout the dark hours, hundreds screamed for help as rescue craft plied through streets to the aid of stranded. But It was In Wheeling that the river struck hardest. Wheeling Island, In the center of the river between the Ohio snd West Virginia shores, was Inundated. Dozens of persons were taken from second and third -story windows by a fleet of fifty or more rescue boats. City Demoralized. Over the lowland section of the city, the water stood at- 18 feet or more, swirling Into the business area. The Windsor hotel, one of the city's largest, was engulfed by the flood. All schools were closed. Ths city was demoralized. Power. was Impair ed snd gae service gone. All down the Ohio, as far as Huntington 300 miles away, thou sands of river-side residents fled to the hills. The danger along the river was acute. In Steuben vllle, Ohio, the water supply Vas contaminated and medi cal authorities called for anti-typhus serum from Columbus and other cities. q At Bellalre. the hospital sent out a distress call for water as ths city's supply waa cut off. Up at the source of ths great Ohio, at the confluence of the Mononga- hela and Allegheny rlvera. Pittsburgh was a debrla-strewn msss of desola tion. Inside the steel metropolis, "Golden Triangle," where millions of dollars changed hands before the flood came yesterday, slime and receding waters coated st roots snd buildings. Alert national guardsmen, kept everyone out of the business area. There waa not a trace of looting. Waters Becede. The waters fell back at the rate of six Inches an hour, but the city of 700.000 faced another night with out lights. Not a trolley car moved. There waa 10 feet of water In some parts of the department store and theater district, but in , other sections, boats pressed hastily Into service yesterday, were stranded by the receding flood. i From suburbsn Sharpsburg came a report, not Immediately verified, of ths discovery of sis bodies by firemen. The danger appeared past st Johns town, cut off from the rest of the nation four hours by tha flooded Conemaugh river. The 3iem a honing dam waa holding and believed aafe and the river waa virtually back within it normal banks. Five hundred guardsmen rushed Into the city last night Vnd today to aid In rehabilitation, aa thou sands of persons cold, hungry and horrified after hours of pngulsh straggled back to their homes, many of them now mere shamble. Trucka of foodstuffs, sent from all over the wet. rolled oito the city throughout the forenoon. Oeorge Fullmei. manager of the Johnstown Telephone compsiiy who kept the outside world informed of the distress throughout the crest of the flood, estimated the dsmuge st 10.000.000 fw shove the glean dls- rvrt jmil I Tinstone TIRES mt INS 3 7 VI 1 Comment on the Day s News Br FRANK JENKINS HIRE Is s roughly accurate state ment of fact that, taken BY IT SELF, will probably not lmpresa you "Federal, state and local taxes In ths United States amount to about twelve billion dollars a year." , We've been dealing In billions so long thst ths mere recital of them no longer staggers us. ' f ET8 ace If we can make these flg- -s ures mesn something; y For exsmple: The nation's annual tax bill Is about 13 billion dollars. The natlon'c snuusl FOOD bill Is about 11 bll lion dollars. . , Thdt Is to sty, taxes cost ss much. as food. iNbwii consider this: the producera and tha pro cessors and tha distributors of food dldnt have to pay out so much In taxes they could SELL FOOD CHEAP' ER. nrHE nation's tax bill, as already suited, Is 13 billion dollars year. Tlio nation's annual rent bill Is about 'ten billion dollars. If the owners of real estate weren't so heavily taxed, they could RENT HOUSES CHEAPER. -T-HE paopla of the united States spend annually for clothing about 'sis billion dollars. In. other worda, all the money apent by all the people of thla country for clothing amounts to only about HALF as much a thty have to pay lnt&xea. Light and power bills for the en tire country" total about two billion dollars, or ctne-alxth of the annual tax bill. LIGHT and power, ror toe most . part, are produced and sold by public service corporations. That lends Interest to this Jact: s Net annual Income of all the cor porations In the United States Is about three billion dollara. That la to say. If. a!ll the net Income of ALL the corporatlona in the country were CONFISCATED, It would pay only ONE-FOURTH of the'taxea. ' -"PAXES re high because goveru . menti spends so much for every dollar spent by government has to be raised by taxation. Oovernmerita spend recklessly be cause the politician believe that spending by ' government Is popular with the votars. Politician stand or fall according ;to the way people vote, Aa long a he politician believe that reckless spending Is popular, gov ernment will continue to spend reck lessly, y T-HE polltlclana have built up the M. Idea that ony the rich ara tax edthat ordinary people get off scot free, benefiting by government expen ditures and contributing nothing In return. That ISN'T TRUE. Taxes are a part of tha coat of do ing business, and have to be added to the price of the product when it la sold. When you buy food, taxes are Included in the price you pay. When you pay rent, taxes are Included in the bill. If taxes are high, prlcea of every thing you buy MUST be higher than they would be if taxes were not so high. ' ANOTHER thought: The more the boas haa to pay in taxes, the LESS he has left to pay wagea with for wagea can come only out of the money the boas earns. S. P. FREIGHT HEAD MEDFORD VISITOR J. T. Saundera. vice-president of 1 system freight traffic for the South- i em Pacific railway, arrived In Med- I ford this morning from his hesdquar- : tera In San Francisco on an Inspec tion trip of the northern territory of the company. Saundera apent the day In company of A. S. Roaenbaum. district passen ger agent, and H. W. Cllne. general freight agent from Portland, In con ferring with local fruit and produce ahlppera and packing houae execu tlrea on business mattera. Saundera Is heed of the traffic di vision of the entire Southern Pacific Una. He la traveling by private car. which will be connected wtth the Oregonlan this evening to continue north. Sllrrr NEW YORK. March 19. (API Bar llvr stesdv and unchanged at 44,c. COUGHING AGAIN? pOJTT b. that pr of .11 th. frvQuent nf. fern f'rra wosfct u. to COM, bo r.Mr. If rni rncJa la the ard i 'T- rsaVrtv r Si krto thrm- r.-wtditfr. an ttot at frmtja-nlr th te who affr and toitjh Hrrr Dr rua'a ulJfn MrdvaJ riacr-rtrr from xnr druf r KfcU? It ltvr.rt (h appttiit, aid Ai rt(Mi and iKerthy ht)p lo hniid trrntpr ht:al mutant-. It has atan prt1 W -t'ttt is KeKTiAi sCttslU 4m to coida. Tn it 3 aalJriK W4aT Communications To Ward Off Communism. To the Editor:' There appears an ever Increasing fear In America concerning tha spread of communism. Much discussion baa resulted and laws passed designed to effect Its suppression, will not such action merely drive the advocate un der cover where his work will be car ried on with greater venom than could be the case If left in the open? In order to rid the country of this subversive threat, we ahould seek to remove the cause that breeds discon tent and lams. To do thla we must provide a sys tern In which the people are happy and contented. Thla cannot be done under a condition In whlcb millions of our people find themselves wltho'lt I meana, unemployed and no work available. -The United States will be a fertile field for such propaganda so long as our problem of unemployment re malna unsolved. It Is the breeding bed of discontent. While unemployment' la dally mounting, Btrlkes Increasing and wagea are being lowered, the great multitudes, the "forgotten man," Is looking for a system that will lead him out of hla muddled wilderness of economlo chaos. Latest estimates say that 13,600,000 are now employed To thla add the 600,000 CCC boys now In camps and the 3.500. 000 men now temporarily employed by the govern ment on WPA project and we have a staggering number. Fully one-third of the entire employable population of the United States. At the same time the elevator and hotel employes of New York are striking for a 48-hour week, while one out of every four of her population receive public or private relief. The city with the greatest accumulation of wealth, with the greatest prorata of poverty and misery, cannot escape being the greatest breeder of under ground un-American propaganda. Capitalistic Russia failed to heed the cry of her people for better con ditions, she hurtled the agitators oft to Siberia. Are we following In the wake of old Russia In denying "free speech" and the right of assembly? I hold no brief for communism. It la antipathetic to the Idealistic Amer ican spirit of Individualism and free dom. The professional agitator can not succeed alone. He will necessarily aim at our most vulnerable weakness. Therefore It Is possible, through mis ery, poverty and privation, our mass ed millions might. In thlr despond ency, grasp at such a straw under a beguiling leadership. We ahould re move the cause, not the forum, and thua crush all opposition to our dem ocratic form of government. The constitution of the United Statea guaranteed "free apeech," yet we are sending to the pen advocates of communism. Why make It a crime to learn what any of the various lams stand for? They are devices used In the government of great and power ful nations, is thla doctrine of com munism so alluring and convincing that all who read or hear would be come Converted? Who are afraid of the open forum? We need have no fear that our oeo- ernment pia will atampede to a system of gov inferior to otr own. The people should. If thev desire, un,,.!,! memaeives with all the facta. They are me nnai judgea at the pons. The decision will not be left to those des ignated by President Roosevelt aa the beneficiaries of "Intrenched greed. ' Their votes are very few. not many yeara ago there was a great agitation for "single tax." pur ported to be a forerunner toward so cialism. No one was sent to the pen for Its advocation. It dominated sve eral elections and each time was vot ed under three or four to one. Vou hear no more of "single tax." The voter weighed It In the balance and decided against the system. Com munism would be dealt the same fats unless the voter decided It to be a .better system than the one under which we now operate. We must not forget that this la the people's prerogative, aa per specifica tions In the preamble to our consti tution, which stipulates, that "when ever any form of government becomes destructive. It Is the right of the peo ple to alter or abolish It, and to In stitute new government, laying It foundation on auch principles and organizing It powers In such form, as to them ahall seem most likely to effect their safety and happlneas." It la therefore evident that In order to guard against one of the various Isms now threatening, we MUST re move the cause unemployment. It's our only assurance. All labor belongs In the lap of in dustry, and no place else. About one third of this total la now abandoned because Industry cannot absorb It at present houra of employment. You'll Be In Print (Si We have a special assortment of Spring Print Dresses including styles with coat to match and Redingotea. C1 9 QC Lovely colors 4 I Livid NEW NELLY DONS Select your spring Kelly Dong while aitet are complete. An exciting variety of styles and fabrics. $195 to $10,95 SKIRTS AND BLOUSES Tweeds, plaidi and plain colors QC in tailored skirts. 31.05 and 4a..J0 New shipments of blouses 81.95 Wash Frocks for Spring Colorful prints, plaids, stripes. Specially 4 m.Q priced at ) I a I 9 ADRIENNE'S This momentous problem, will sot be solved until the demand la aqual to the supply and for that reason, the pay adequate. Supply and demand la fundamental In establishing price. It applies the same to labor as to wheat, cotton, meats and lumber. The one and only solution as far offered la the Townaend plan a em bodied In the McGroarty bill. If there la a better aolutlon It ahould be brought to the fore. F. W. 0HAUSSB, Medford. Oregon.' March 18, 1936. Flight 'o Time Medford and Jackson County history from the files of the Mall Tribune 10 and 20 years aeo. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY March 19. 1928 (It was Friday) Egg prlcea drop, and poultrymsn store egga for higher prlcea. Sardine Creek hllla ara raecca wild flower aeekera. of Home of O. E. Beera In Evans Valley- destroyed by fire. Mr. and Mrs. Fred L. Heath, Sr., return from trip to southern Call forma. Construction work at Camp Jackson for national guard encampment In June to atart soon. Jay Upton of Bend, candidate for governor, promises lower auto license feea. Little hope for passage of farm bill by congress. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY - March 19, 1916 (It was Sunday) Allied airmen bombard German air base at Zeebrugge. Complete alienee covers chase of Bandit Villa by American troopa In Mexico. Showera fall over the valley, caus ing farmers to rejoice. Rich gold strike reported on Birds- eye creek near Gold Hill. Commercial club and business men call meeting to discuss extension of Bullla line to Blue Lodge mine. Roving lecturer at Nat urgea "peo ple to break chains of the power trust." . . State health officer flies report that Ashlsnd springs water la free from germs. Announcement Two new songs "Dream Pal of Mine and "Shine on Southern Moon," by local writers. Words by Mae MacKin non, music by Fred Alton Height will be presented for the first time over radio on KMED by Miss La Merle Beck on Beck's program at 11 :30 a. m. Fri day. HURRAH.. HURRAY! I'VE LOST 40 POUNDS They made me tired-all thoee slen der women who were telling me not to eat potatoes and pastry and ice cream! They ate the same things I did yet they never gained a pound I But I fooled them! Knew some thing was wrong with my body, so I took 4 tabletsadaycontaining a sim ple corrective for abnormal obesity prescribed by doctors the world over. Eesultswere amazing. Ididn't diet, exercise, or drain my system by tak ing drastic purgatives. But gradual ly excess fat disappeared. Today I'm trim and slender. That, in brief, is what thousands of women who have reduced the Marmola way might well tell yon if they had the chance. Would you like to learn their secret? 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